Mark
Emmert rips NCAA unionization
Updated: April 6, 2014, 3:13 PM ET
Collegiate Sports At A Crossroads
ARLINGTON, Texas -- Change is
coming to the NCAA, but it's not necessarily the sort of change athletes would
want entirely.
In a wide-ranging press conference
at the Final Four, NCAA president Mark Emmert and other college administrators
discussed pending change to the governance structure that will likely include
cost of attendance and autonomy for the power conferences.
The notion of using a union employee model to address the
challenges that do exist in intercollegiate athletics is something that strikes
most people as a grossly inappropriate solution to the problems. It would blow
up everything about the collegiate model of athletics.
--
NCAA president Mark Emmert
But the group drew a line in the
sand at the thought of unionization for athletes.
"To be perfectly frank, the
notion of using a union employee model to address the challenges that do exist
in intercollegiate athletics is something that strikes most people as a grossly
inappropriate solution to the problems," Emmert said Sunday. "It
would blow up everything about the collegiate model of athletics."
The National Labor Relations Board
recently ruled that it agreed with a filing made by Northwestern football players that they qualify as employees of their
schools and can unionize.
It is the first of what many
anticipate will be a long, drawn-out process filled with appeals and dialogue
from both sides -- but still a decision that has the potential to significantly
alter how college athletics have been run essentially forever.
But those who would be on the other
side of the bargaining table, so to speak, are clearly prepared to fight such
significant change.
"There's some things that need
to get fixed," Emmert said. "They're working very aggressively to do
that. No one up here believes that the way you fix that is by converting
student-athletes into unionized employees."
What Emmert, the attending
presidents and Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby did agree on is that other
changes need to come to the NCAA, and come quickly.
The Division I board of directors
is expected to vote in August on major governance changes that could include
awarding cost of attendance to athletes and would also allow the so-called
power conferences to operate under a model slightly different than everyone
else.
That last change has been met with
some resistance by smaller schools, worried that it would only create an even
deeper chasm between the haves and have-not schools in Division I.
But Emmert and the committee
members said that they believe the resistance is not so strong and that they
fully expect the proposals to be met.
"I think that most of Division
I memberships see that we're standing at a fork in the road," said Kirk
Schulz, president of Kansas State University and a member of the Division I
steering committee for governance. "What we're going to put out there is
not perfect, but I believe the vast majority of members recognize that we need
to do it rapidly.
"So I'm very optimistic that we're going to have
some no votes. But I think at the end of the day, there's a realization that if
you don't do this, that we could be in some real trouble."
1) Should college athletes be allowed to unionize?
2) Should college athletes become employees of the college they attend and receive a salary?
3) If they are making money (earning a salary) should they still be allowed to earn a degree?
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